DWQA QuestionsCategory: Extraterrestrial InterlopersIt’s becoming clear with multiple recent discoveries that nearly the entire region now covered with Amazon Rainforest was once a great Mayan Empire. Today that empire is literally covered with some of the most noxious and dangerous plant and animal life seen anywhere on the planet. There is so much variety in this region, that even today much of it remains uncatalogued and even undiscovered. But has it always been this way? Did the Mayan Empire truly have to compete with all these aggressive vegetation and dangerous critters? Or was it more temperate and gentle, and only became hostile due to the intervention of the interlopers? The indigenous tribes there are extremely xenophobic. Is that because they are direct descendants of the former destroyed Mayan Empire who escaped to the dangerous jungles just to survive, as they would have perished otherwise? What can Creator tell us?
Nicola Staff asked 16 hours ago
The example of the Mayans is an object lesson in the extraterrestrial agenda, that what the ETs come to despise most will likely be destroyed. We can tell you that the disappearance of the Mayans was because of them being under attack by the Extraterrestrial Alliance, and not only being overwhelmed with attacks of many kinds to limit them but choosing, themselves, to not return. This happened over time with growing numbers discouraged about the prospect of making headway to solve the problem of the interlopers who made them suffer. The extraterrestrials, for their part, with the withdrawal or elimination of the Mayans, largely, from the planet, wanted to keep going with their savage impulses driving them forward, as often happens in creating a kind of bloodlust, and they decided to, in effect, poison the well. They systematically introduced many harmful and deleterious species into that region of South America, species that were well-adapted to thrive but each containing aggressive and negative characteristics with respect to being useful and effective neighbors of other species in that habitat. The end result is on display for all to see, the proverbial jungle of pestilence and dangerous predators; in a sense, a giant weed patch where more gentle and beneficent species cannot compete very effectively. So this shift for the worse across the spectrum of life forms did not cause the disappearance of the Mayans but was a continuation of an intentional manipulation and elimination brought about by the interlopers.